Long-term jobless crisis stumps experts

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Updated 8:02 pm, Friday, February 8, 2013

Job applicants complete forms at a job fair in Newark, N.J. The long-term unemployed make up 38 percent of all workers without jobs.

Job applicants complete forms at a job fair in Newark, N.J. The long-term unemployed make up 38 percent of all workers without jobs.

Photo: Mark Lennihan, Associated Press

Long-term jobless crisis stumps experts

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Michelle Hall, 44, hasn't worked since June, when funding ran out for her administrative job at Peaceful Acres Horses, a sanctuary in Pattersonville, N.Y. She applies for jobs online and usually hears nothing.

"It's a feeling of what I'll call emptiness," she said. "I have a lot of skills that are very applicable across the board, from file clerk to middle management."

Hall is the face of a new problem that remains poorly understood: chronic, long-term unemployment that continues even as job growth resumes across the economy. The rate of short-term unemployment - six months or less - is almost back to normal. In January, it was 4.9 percent of the labor force. That's only 0.7 percentage point above its 2001-07 average.

But the rate of long-term unemployment, 3 percent in January, is precisely triple its 2001-07 average, according to a Bloomberg Businessweek calculation based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data. (Those two rates - 4.9 percent and 3 percent - add up to the overall unemployment rate of 7.9 percent.)

A striking statistic: The long-term unemployed make up 38 percent of all workers without jobs, double the average share and just a few notches down from the 2010-11 peak of 45 percent.

Puzzled over change

Economists are puzzling over what has changed. Is it generous benefits that make it easy to stay unemployed? Or erosion of skills that render people unemployable? Or discrimination by employers?

Peter Diamond, an economist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology who received a Nobel Prize for his work on labor markets, says that regardless of the causes of long-term unemployment, the harm it causes justifies strong efforts to stimulate the economy, so even the long-term jobless are absorbed. Other public policy problems, he said, take second place.

"We have an unemployment crisis and only a debt problem," Diamond said.

One way to visualize this issue is to compare U.S. unemployment with job openings since 2001, as Rand Ghayad, a doctoral candidate in economics at Northeastern University, and his adviser, labor economist William Dickens, have done. Their work was part of a report they wrote that was published last year by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. It was so striking that the Boston Fed named Ghayad a visiting fellow.

Employer bias

Ghayad and Dickens show unemployment only for people out of work more than six months. Their findings depict a conventional pattern until the summer of 2009: Job openings became scarce, and unemployment rose. After that, more jobs began to open up, but long-term unemployment kept rising. The long-term jobless rate has fallen a bit over the past year but is still far higher than it was the last time there were this many openings, from 2003 to 2004.

Ghayad sent out fictitious resumes to employers in 50 metro areas to see how they reacted to long spells of unemployment. He found that an "applicant" out of work more than six months had little to no chance of being called back. The resumes of those out of work for less than six months drew more interest when they showed the applicants had relevant industry experience. At more than six months of no work, having industry experience didn't help at all, Ghayad found.

Opposite views

Even if employers do pass over the long-term unemployed, that's not prima facie evidence of illegal discrimination. Employers could argue - rightly or wrongly - that being out of work signals something is wrong. It's not illegal in most states for companies to factor in an applicant's job status when filling a position. It would have been under President Obama's American Jobs Act, which was introduced in 2011 but has been blocked by Republican opposition.

The optimistic take is that the bulge is the result of an unusually deep recession and will shrink with time and growth. Picky employers will have to hire the long-term unemployed once the economy fully recovers and the labor market tightens. That's why MIT's Diamond favors more fiscal and monetary stimulus.

Long-term drought

The pessimistic take is that the jobs aren't coming back. Andy Stern, former president of the Service Employees International Union, said the long-term unemployed are among the first to suffer from what he predicts will be a more generalized job drought, which will be the result largely of automation.

Said Stern, who stepped down from the SEIU in 2010 and is a senior fellow at Columbia University'sRichman Center for Business, Law & Public Policy: "You ain't seen nothing yet."